Federal election ‘08: Early predictions for Atlantic Canada

Sep 12th, 2008 Posted in Atlantic Canada | No Comments »

Changes comes slowing in Atlantic Canada, particularly during a federal election campaign.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the federal Conservatives continue to find this region of the country resistent to their overtures, and in the case of Newfoundland and Labrador, comically enraged at Harper’s new deal for Atlantic Canada.

There are 32 ridings in the four Atlantic provinces – seven in NL, 11 in NS, 10 in NB and four in PEI – but only a handful will likely switch parties on election night.

Here are my early predictions for Atlantic Canada:

Newfoundland and Labrador

  • Current: 4 Tories – 3 Liberals
  • Oct. 14: 1 Tories – 5 Liberals — 1 NDP

Nova Scotia

  • Current: 2 Tories – 6 Liberals — 2 NDP — 1 Independent
  • Oct. 14: 2 Tories – 6 Liberals — 2 NDP — 1 Independent

PEI

  • Current: 4 Liberals
  • Oct. 14: 3 Liberals — 1 Tory

New Brunswick

  • Current: 3 Tories — 6 Liberals — 1 NDP
  • Oct. 14: 5 Tories — 4 Liberals — 1 NDP

For those doing the math, Atlantic Canada will likely be a wash for the Tories, with New Brunswick helping the Tories hold their overall six-seat total after they are shut out of Newfoundland and Labrador; the Liberals will drop one seat to 18 from 19 seats and the NDP may get a surprise steal, courtesy of Danny Williams’ ABC campaign.

All this means that Atlantic Canadians shouldn’t expect to see much of Stephen Harper during this campaign – his quest for 28 additional seats and a majority government lie elsewhere in southern Ontario and Quebec.

Atlantic Canadians may be the first to vote on election day, but predictably they aren’t likely at the top of the party leaders’ lists for who to woo during this campaign.

Update: Pakistan’s murdered brides

Sep 3rd, 2008 Posted in In the news | No Comments »

The Pakistan government has opened an investigation into the murder of five young women who were killed because they wanted to marry for love following protests throughout the country.

Pakistan Begins Inquiry into Deaths of Five Women

News of the killings, which occurred six weeks ago, trickled out of the remote, tribal area slowly and with sketchy details. As described in an Aug. 21 statement by a French human rights group, the victims were three young women who had planned to marry men of their choice — a blot on family honor — and two older female relatives.

All were kidnapped by several men on July 13 from their village, Baba Kot, in the department of Jafferabad, and taken to a deserted area in a vehicle bearing provincial government plates, according to the group, the International Federation for Human Rights. The young women were beaten and shot, and, still breathing, covered with earth and stones. The two older women tried to intervene and were buried alive as well. (Source: NY Times)

A lot of hot air over LNG

Sep 3rd, 2008 Posted in Media & Images | No Comments »

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) in the U.K. has told Exxon Mobil to pull an ad for liquified natural gas (LNG) that calls LNG one of the cleanest fuels in the world. Four people complained to the authority that the claim isn’t true when compared against all forms of energy and the authority agreed. Unsurprisingly, Exxon Mobil is appealing the decision.

The claim that LNG is clean fuel is routinely made by producers and distributors here in North America. It is, when we’re talking about fossil fuels (petroleum and coal), an argument Exxon Mobil made – to no avail – to the authority.

ExxonMobil said the ad was “accurate and truthful”, after the Advertising Standards Authority today upheld four complaints from viewers saying the ad misleadingly implied that liquefied natural gas was environmentally friendly when in fact it caused significant carbon emissions.

The TV campaign featured three employees talking about the energy challenges facing the world today, ending with the message: “ExxonMobil … Taking on the world’s toughest energy challenges.”

Negotiating through the new, environmentally-sensitive, public domain is proving to be very difficult for oil and gas companies. Not that long ago they were the swaggering Alpha males in the room. Now they’re more like the ever-so-uncool guy at work; we’re polite but we don’t really want to hang out with them at the office Christmas party.

To view the ad that the U.K. public watchdog doesn’t want on the air, follow this link, ExxonMobil LNG ad

For the full story in The Guardian — ExxonMobil to contest ban on ad for liquified natural gas

The shot not heard ’round the world

Sep 2nd, 2008 Posted in In the news | No Comments »

Crazy day for news about women.

Sarah Palin, U.S. Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s running mate, dominated the headlines around the world with the revelation her 17-year-old daughter is pregnant and intends to marry her hockey-loving boyfriend. Palin’s VP candidacy has prompted lots of commentary. The overriding opinion is she is too inexperienced, particularly on issues of foreign policy, and only got the nomination because she is a woman. Fab.

Women columnists and bloggers are also caught up in a debate about whether, as a mother of five, including a baby with Downs syndrome, and her impending grandmotherhood, she is going to be able to have it all. My favourite comment comes from Phyllis Schlafly, famed anti-feminist, who says women who have one or two babies just don’t get it. Its easy to juggle when you’ve got five or more kids because you just delegate…just like a CEO.

But she received particular praise from religious conservatives, who voiced near-uniform confidence that her large and growing brood would enhance, not detract from, her performance as vice president.

“It changes your life and gives you a different perspective on the world,” said Phyllis Schlafly, the conservative organizer who helped defeat the equal rights amendment nearly three decades ago.

“People who don’t have children or who have only one or two are kind of overwhelmed at the notion of five children,” Ms. Schlafly continued, mentioning that she had raised six children and run for Congress as well. “I think a hard-working, well-organized C.E.O. type can handle it very well.”

Read the whole story in the New York Times  A New Twist in the Debate on Mothers

Meanwhile, elsewhere in the New York Times, receiving far less play than Mrs. Palin, was this item:

Pakistan: Murder of Brides Investigated

The authorities began an investigation Monday into the killing of five women in Baluchistan Province who tried to choose their own husbands. The women, three of them teenagers, were shot, thrown into a ditch and buried alive more than a month ago. The authorities suspect they were killed because they had defied tribal elders by marrying without consent. The police said they had arrested three relatives of the women in connection with their deaths. A provincial lawmaker defended their deaths as part of a “centuries-old tradition.”

In Pakistan, they bury alive their daughters who dare to marry for love. For them, there is no choice. In North America, we struggle with our choices because we have so many and we think that not accepting all of them will reflect badly on who we are and the many titles we claim – daughter, mother, lover, worker.

I am among those women who wonder how Sarah Palin will do it all and I wish her luck. What I don’t, is wish it for me.

And rounding out the news, was a story out of the U.K. Respected actress Helen Mirren, gave an interview in which she talked about how she used to love cocaine and that date rape isn’t something that should be left to the courts to settle.

She revealed it all in an article in the October issue of British GQ and it has been taken up by commentators in all the U.K. dailies.

For two different takes on Mirren’s comments, try Julie Bindel at The Guardian – Helen Mirren’s twisted logic

Some of the women reading Mirren’s words will take notice of her daft views. She is a role model and a highly respected individual. They might think that if they reported a rape by a man they were intimate with that the police will think they are wasting their time. Some might feel shame that they have been devastated by an attack by a man who chose not to beat her up and put a knife to her throat. I hope not, but it is likely that her words will influence some in entirely the wrong way.

… and then check out an editorial in The Independent  – Is Helen Mirren Right about Date Rape?

Only 5 per cent of reported rapes in Britain now end in a successful prosecution – one of the lowest conviction rates in the developed world. A key determinant, Mr Graef concluded, was today’s “ladette culture” in which young women routinely drink to excess.

Where victims of rape have been drinking, the chances of conviction are seriously lowered. Defence barristers who can no longer raise questions in court about the victim’s “provocative” clothes, or her previous history of sexual liaisons, can raise questions about the amount of alcohol she has consumed – and introduce CCTV footage of the woman in a drunken state.

Three continents. Three interpretations of women’s sexuality. Each is about the choices an individual woman makes and the rush to judgment by her family, and her community for those choices.